Matching Monochromatic Couples Dressing Means True Love

Early this morning, we were introduced to our new couple obsession. Move over Blake and Ryan, goodbye Zigi, farewell Beckhams, our hearts are taken by Chris Pine and Annabelle Wallis.

And this new-fangled fixation upon #Chrisabelle isn't based off inconsequential things like how they met or how much they like each other; it's based off the only thing that matters: their impeccable couples dressing.

The couple stepped out in London yesterday where they basically redefined the concept of fashion. Wearing matching autumnal tones, Annabelle wore a camel knit dress, a statement belt with a gold buckle, a burgundy bag and caramel sandals; Chris wore a soft brown suit, a white shirt and brown suede shoes.

We need them to get married. Preferably in matching tonal sets.

But of course, even though Chris and Annabelle are at the very tippy-top of the date-night dressing phenomena, they are joined by several other couples who understand that monochromatic couple outfits are the physical representation of true love.

Kourtney Kardashian and her 25-year-old male model boyfriend Younes Bendjima understand how things work. The couple have been swanning around the Italian coast for days, and have produced several good iterations of our new favourite trend, like this blue-and-white moment:

There's science in here somewhere, too. Relationship expert Dr Nikki Goldstein told the Huffington Post in 2016 that we naturally gravitate to dressing like our partners. "You conform to the environment that you're in—so it's only natural that when you're dating someone, even automatically without knowing—you will start to change your style so that you blend in with them."